buchanan_jm -> RE: The initial draft (9/25/2009 5:01:06 PM)
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I did my homework for the initial draft, but my strategy was to draft emerging players, young not old players. I was hoping with the 16th pick to draft either Gehrig or Foxx, but I didn't expect either to be there. Picks one thru three were: Ruth, Gehrig, Grove. But by the time we got to pick 16, Foxx was still there. Because the draft snaked (yay!), I'd get 2 picks in a row. I knew Foxx would be one, and I figured I should take a pitcher with the other. So I selected Mel Harder 16th and Foxx 17th. Both players remain with my team. Foxx won the MVP in '32, '33, '34, '35, '36, and '37. An amazing 6 year run. Harder has done well, too, winning best pitcher in '32, '33, and '37. But, in retrospect, Harder was probably a reach; I think I took him too early. He was young, and I've realized while playing many seasons that the AI would have probably let him go a few more rounds. I can't be sure, and so I don't really regret the pick, but I'm just saying. I focused, in the initial draft, too much on position players. I had a great infield: Foxx, Gehringer, Bartell, and Pinky Higgins, but I would find out that I needed better starting pitching. I also decided to use 5 man rotations. I can't really say why. I think I wanted the game to look more like baseball as I knew it, and there were lots of pitchers who I really wanted to see pitch. The version of PS I began with (I paid for my first copy of the game, and I'd do it again!) automatically used a modern day style closer, although that changed for my 2nd season. Anyway, I had a starting staff of: Lloyd Brown (who would win best pitcher that first year), Harder, Fred Frankhouse, Chief Hogsett, and ... That was my problem. I had no 5th starter. I tried everything. I drafted Lon Warneke, but he wasn't ready. I actually tried him first--about 5 starts--but his potential arrow when from up to down, and I thought I might be wrecking him (a PS rookie mistake?). I tried everyone else I had, eventually trading for Joe Shaute, but he was equally awful. I think I started Gordon Rhodes more than anyone else, but I was lucky if he made it 5 innings and gave up fewer than 5 runs. I would also get quite angry at the game when there was a single to 2B for example. The ball flight animation led me to believe that the hit should have been an out. It took me a while to separate ball flight from result. And I also realized that I wanted to be a cool, even-keel manager. The best way to be that kind of manager was to be the best GM and get the best staff and best position players I could. In the initial draft, I was crushed when Paul Waner was taken before I could get him, and so I settled for Lloyd Waner. Lloyd Waner and Jimmie Foxx have been the best players in my league to date. Lloyd's career has been better than Paul's. I didn't expect that. At the end of this year (1940), I'll have to decide if I'll keep Waner and Foxx. Waner never feels better than "fair"; Foxx's best is "good." Lloyd's still hitting over .300, but he's lost his speed. He's still good defensively and can play any outfield position, but I play him only about 100 games a year. The other significant move I made my first year, once I realized I needed pitching, was to trade a couple of backups--Jim Levey, an infielder with huge potential and Tom Oliver, my 4th outfielder--for Dizzy Dean and Ivy Andrews. This trade turned out to be a steal for me. The AI should have never left Dizzy go. Dizzy has won best pitcher for me in '36 and '39 and went 27-1 in '39. Remember that's in a 5-man rotation.
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